68-year-old Jay Haas teams with son Bill to become oldest player to make a PGA Tour cut at Zurich Classic of New Orleans

Jay Haas, 68, is the oldest player to make a cut on the PGA Tour, edging past Sam Snead, who did it in 1979.

All Bill Haas wanted to do was cozy his 47-foot birdie putt into tap-in range at the 18th hole at TPC Louisiana so Team Haas could have a stress-free finish to the second round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. So much for best-laid plans.

Bill’s putt stalled 4 ½ feet short meaning his dad, Jay, would have to sweat over a par putt in the alternate-shot format to make the cut of the PGA Tour’s lone two-man team event as part of the FedEx Cup season.

For Jay, 68, he’d been in this spot too many times and he delivered as he had on so many Fridays before.

“That was probably as nervous as I’ve ever been over a putt of that length certainly,” he said. “It sounds silly just to have a chance to make the cut. However, there’s a lot of circumstances here that it kind of made it doubly important in my mind.”

That included becoming the oldest player to make a cut on the PGA Tour, edging past Sam Snead, who made the cut at the 1979 Manufacturers Hanover Westchester Classic at 67 years, 2 months and 23 days.

Zurich Classic: Leaderboard | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

“I don’t think it should (count) because Sam Snead did it on his own and all that, but anything that I’m even remotely close to Sam Snead on would be very special,” said Haas, of Snead, who was in the field when he made his Tour debut at the 1973 Wyndham Championship.

Haas is making his 799th Tour start, second on the all-time list behind Mark Brooks (803). Among his other achievements he counts leading the record books with 591 made cuts. And Jay, who captained the 2015 U.S. Presidents Cup team, was no slouch in his prime, winning nine times on Tour and another 18 times on PGA Tour Champions, where he remains active.

2022 Zurich Classic of New Orleans
Jay Haas and Bill Haas react on the ninth green during the first round of the 2022 Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana. (Photo: Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

On Thursday, young guns Collin Morikawa and Viktor Hovland were asked if they could imagine making 800 Tour starts.

“We’ve got a long ways to go,” Hovland said.

“No, I can’t imagine that,” Morikawa added.

“That’s cool. He must have seen some stuff,” Hovland said. “He must have some pretty good stories. That’s a lot of events.”

Team Haas opened with 7-under 65 at the Pete Dye-designed layout matching the best-ball score of Morikawa and Hovland, ranked second and fifth in the world respectively, and defending champions Cameron Smith (No. 4) and Marc Leishman.

On Friday, Team Haas signed for 1-under 71 and made the cut on the number, tying at 8-under 136 with World No. 1 and reigning Masters champion Scottie Scheffler and his partner Ryan Palmer.

“I was getting stretched this morning,” Bill said, “and Charley Hoffman was raving about how good (my dad) played yesterday, and I just kind of said, ‘Well, I see it all the time at home. This isn’t anything new.’ ”

Father and son got off to an auspicious start with birdies at the first two holes. Bill rolled in a 12-foot birdie putt at the first and his old man stuck a wedge to 4 feet at the par-5 second. A bogey at the third only slowed their progress momentarily as they continued to make hay on the par 5s, adding birdies at Nos. 7 and 11. That improved their score to 10 under and comfortably inside the cut line. But the trip to the house was shaky from there with bogeys at Nos. 14 and 17.

“I was grinding,” Bill said. “At 14, he hit an unbelievable hybrid in there on that par-3 and I ran it by five feet and we three-putted, and then the next hole he hit a beautiful 6-iron and I left that three feet short.”

Bill added: “It’s just hard when you’re trying so hard. It’s one of the hardest things to do in golf is to let that go and quit trying so hard and just execute.”

Bill, 39, won the FedEx Cup in 2011 and six Tour titles but none since 2015. He has struggled in recent years to keep his card and this season is using a one-time exemption for being top-25 on the all-time Tour money list. He entered the week at No. 168 in FedEx Cup point standings.

Father and son earned a chance to enjoy two more rounds together, and already have clinched the feel-good story of the week.

“To somehow shake that putt in on the last hole was something I’ll never forget,” Jay said. “But just the whole week, playing with Bill, getting texts from all my kids, it’s just been a real charge.”

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It’s a party in New Orleans: Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay lead, but six teams sit within 3 shots

“I felt like we just have had good vibes all week and we’ve been playing really solid golf.”

AVONDALE, La. — Any follow up to a record-breaking 59 may look like a disappointment, but in a difficult format and tough conditions, Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay fought for a second-round 68 at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

“I think we just wanted to hit a bunch of quality golf shots, and we did that today,” Cantlay said after their round. “We really fought hard and made a bunch of those mid-range putts, especially in the middle of the round, and that kind of kept the momentum going.”

After opening with three birdies in their first four holes, the pair made six straight pars before writing another circle on the card at the par-5 2nd. They closed out their 4-under effort with six pars and a birdie.

“Alternate shot is an opportunity to do some cool things if you’re making a lot of birdies,” Schauffele said, “but for the most part you’re trying to leave your partner in a good spot to make an easy par.”

Zurich Classic: Leaderboard | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

They did just that, limiting the mistakes to a lone bogey on the par-4 12th, their third hole of the day.

“I felt like we just have had good vibes all week and we’ve been playing really solid golf. Same game plan for the weekend,” said Cantlay.

The best-buddy tandem enters the weekend with a one-stroke lead.

One of the pairs just a shot back is David Lipsky and Aaron Rai. Lipsky has had an interesting week — it started with a car accident and now he’s in a great spot to earn his first PGA Tour win.

“This is such a fun week for us. You play with a friend, different format, and I think we’re just enjoying it,” Lipsky said. “Wherever Doc and Sam finish, I know we’re one back of Xander and Pat, but I think we’re just having fun out there. We’re both playing pretty well right now, and I’m looking forward to what we can do this weekend.”

Rai is also searching for his first win on Tour.

Doc Redman and Sam Ryder are the other tandem that sits just one back. Like the Lipsky/Rai team, both players are searching for their first win.

Wyndham Clark/Cameron Tringale and Garrick Higgo/Branden Grace are at 15 under, while Jason Day/Jason Scrivener and Sam Burns/Billy Horschel are at 14 under.

Jay Haas and Bill Haas prepare to putt on the ninth green during the first round of the 2022 Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana in Avondale, Louisiana. (Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

The feel-good story of the week goes to the Haas team, as Jay became the oldest player in history to make the cut at a PGA Tour event (68). He had to do it in dramatic fashion, too, needing to drain a four-and-a-half footer for par at the last.

“That was probably as nervous as I’ve ever been over a putt of that length certainly. It sounds silly just to have a chance to make the cut,” he said.

He is just one start away from 800 on the PGA Tour.

The top 33 teams and ties made the cut to play the weekend. Saturday’s round will be Four-balls with Sunday’s final round will be Foursomes.

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The Australian Jasons tie Zurich Classic alternate shot record with a 7-under 65

Never heard the name, Jason Scrivener? Well, you’re not alone. He doesn’t have PGA Tour status but this week is partnering with pal Jason Day.

Never heard the name, Jason Scrivener? Well, you’re not alone. He doesn’t have PGA Tour status and plays most of his golf on the DP World Tour. But this week, he’s joined good pal and fellow Aussie Jason Day at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans and the pair went deep during Friday’s second round of alternate shot.

“Just known each other for a while and we’ve got the same agent,” Scrivener said when asked how the partnership came to be, “and I just messaged Jase, asked if he needed a partner, and he said yes.”

That text is paying dividends.

The Australians started their round with a nice birdie on the first after Day put his approach to six feet. Back-to-back birdies came at 4 and 5 before an eagle on 7, set up by Day’s 255-yard 3-wood finishing a mere 12 feet from the hole.

“Gripped down, high kind of like just fading this thing back into the wind to kill it enough to land soft enough,” Day said of the shot, “and fortunately for us this morning the greens were very receptive.”

After playing their next three holes in even par, they got back on track playing holes 11-14 at 3 under. A bogey on 17 and failing to birdie the par-5 last derailed their chances of beating their best-ball score from Thursday, and the Zurich alternate shot tournament record, but nevertheless the Aussies made a big jump up the leaderboard.

Zurich Classic: Leaderboard | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

“I think we just kind of got on a roll today. We both were hitting fairways and greens and giving ourselves looks at it,” Day said. “Managed to roll a few in. I think it was just basically mistake-free. I think that was the biggest part.”

Day’s last three starts have ended with a Friday trunk slam, and his last win dates back to the 2018 Wells Fargo Championship. Despite the drought, the 12-time Tour winner isn’t getting ahead of himself.

“Obviously, it would be nice to win, but I can’t think about outcome stuff because obviously that’s going to stress me out if I think about it too much and things don’t happen my way,” he said. “Right now I’m just focused on trying to stay as present as possible every single day.”

The Jasons posted a 36-hole aggregate of 14-under 128, three back of the lead held by Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, and squarely in contention heading into the weekend.

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The winners of Zurich Classic will not hail from Chile as Joaquin Niemann and Mito Pereira withdraw

Mito Pereira, the reigning Korn Ferry Tour Player of the Year, was unable to play citing a back injury.

The champions of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans will not hail from Chile. This much we know.

That’s because the Chilean team of Joaquin Niemann and Mito Pereira withdrew from the two-man team event prior to the start of the second round at TPC Louisiana. Pereira, the reigning Korn Ferry Tour Player of the Year, was unable to play citing a back injury.

Niemann and Pereira opened with a best ball score of 5-under 67 in the opening round, and were scheduled to tee off at 9:18 a.m. local time in the second round, which is being contested in alternate shot format.

Pereira, 27, was making his 17th start of the season and had made five cuts in his last six starts. His best result this season is a third-place finish at the Fortinet Championship, his lone top 10. Niemann, 23, won the Genesis Invitational in February. The two Chilean natives grew up playing together in Santiago, share the same coach, and are longtime friends.

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Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay catch Thursday heater, fire record 59 in opening round of Zurich Classic of New Orleans

11 birdies and an eagle – that’ll do.

AVONDALE, La. — A lot was made this week of the Viktor Hovland/Collin Morikawa team, and deservedly so. They’re ranked No. 5 and No. 2, respectively, in the Official World Golf Ranking and were the betting favorites.

But that doesn’t mean the Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay team is any less stacked.

Schauffele, No. 12 in the world, and Cantlay, No. 4 in the world, opened this week’s Zurich Classic on fire. Schauffele buried a 12-footer on No. 1 for birdie, Cantlay then made eagle on 2, then each of them made two more birdies going out to turn with a 7-under 29.

They added birdies on Nos. 10, 11, and 12 to get to 10 under for the round. After three consecutive pars, Schauffele took the lid back off after sticking his approach to two feet on 16.

Zurich Classic: LeaderboardPGA Tour Live on ESPN+ | Friday tee times

With the course record of 60 in site, which was tied earlier in the day by Matthew NeSmith and Taylor Moore, the team approached the par-3 17th

Deterred by water lurking on the left, both tee shots ended right of the green but in a spot where an up-and-down save seemed like a forgone conclusion.

But par wasn’t good enough for Cantlay.

The six-time winner on Tour holed out from off the green to get the pair to 12 under for the day, tied for the lead, and a closing birdie away from setting a new course record of 59.

On the par-5 18th, Schauffele’s drive found a fairway bunker but Cantlay was in the mayor’s office. His 3-wood found the dance floor, setting up a 44-foot putt for an eagle and a 58.

Cantlay’s bid came up just short, and right in the jaws, but it was good enough for an easy tap in and a sub-60 effort.

Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay react to their putt on the 12th green during the first round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana on April 21, 2022 in Avondale, Louisiana. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

“I wasn’t really thinking about 59 just because it’s best ball,” Cantlay said about his mindset coming down 18. “Yeah, I mean, just trying to make a birdie on par-5 like every other week.”

The pair is back at it tomorrow morning alongside Scottie Scheffler and Ryan Palmer at 9:53 a.m. ET. Round 2 will feature alternate shot.

“It’s just the first quarter. So the buffer, we’re only one shot ahead, but we are going into a format on Friday that we really like,” Cantlay said. “I think Xander and I really like alternate shot. It’s one of our strengths for the week, and we’re really looking forward to it.”

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2022 Zurich Classic of New Orleans Friday tee times, format, TV and streaming info

Everything you need to know for the second round in New Orleans.

The PGA Tour is in the Big Easy for one of the most unique tournaments on the schedule.

Golf’s best are teamed up in pairs for this week’s 2022 Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana, with players competing in a best-ball format in the first and third rounds and alternate shot in the second and final rounds.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the second round of the 2022 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. All times Eastern.

Zurich Classic: LeaderboardPGA Tour Live on ESPN+

1st tee

Tee time Players
9:20 a.m. Matt Wallace and Sam Horsfield
Alex Noren and Henrik Norlander
9:31 a.m. Jason Day and Jason Scrivener
Joel Dahmen and Stephan Jaeger
9:42 a.m. Brian Stuard and Russell Knox
Keegan Bradley and Brendan Steele
9:53 a.m. Jim Herman and Vaughn Taylor
Lucas Herbert and Arjun Atwal
10:04 a.m. J.T. Poston and Patton Kizzire
Seamus Power and Graeme McDowell
10:15 a.m. Sungjae Im and Byeong Hun An
Brendon Todd and Chris Kirk
10:26 a.m. Tyler Duncan and Adam Schenk
Ryan Brehm and Mark Hubbard
10:37 a.m. Cameron Tringale and Wyndham Clark
Maverick McNealy and Joseph Bramlett
10:48 a.m. Scott Gutschewski and D.A. Points
Patrick Rodgers and Brandon Wu
10:59 a.m. Kurt Kitayama and Kiradech Aphibarnrat
Max McGreevy and Andrew Novak
1:35 p.m. Chad Ramey and Joshua Creel
Martin Trainer and Jim Knous
1:46 p.m. Aaron Rai and David Lipsky
Trey Mullinax and Wesley Bryan
1:57 p.m. Bill Haas and Jay Haas
Nick Watney and Charley Hoffman
2:08 p.m. Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman
Viktor Hovland and Collin Morikawa
2:19 p.m. Tyrrell Hatton and Danny Willett
Sergio Garcia and Tommy Fleetwood
2:30 p.m. Shane Lowry and Ian Poulter
Talor Gooch and Max Homa
2:41 p.m. Richy Werenski and Peter Uihlein
Kevin Tway and Kelly Kraft
2:52 p.m. Brandon Hagy and Cameron Percy
Doc Redman and Sam Ryder
3:03 p.m. Sahith Theegala and Beau Hossler
Will Zalatoris and Davis Riley
3:14 p.m. Callum Tarren and David Skinns
Justin Lower and Dylan Wu

10th tee

Tee time Players
9:20 a.m. Sepp Straka and Greyson Sigg
Adam Long and Bo Hoag
9:31 a.m. Chesson Hadley and Jonathan Byrd
Brice Garnett and Scott Stallings
9:42 a.m. Charl Schwartzel and Christiaan Bezuidenhout
Emiliano Grillo and Rafa Cabrera Bello
9:53 a.m. Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele
Scottie Scheffler and Ryan Palmer
10:04 a.m. Sam Burns and Billy Horschel
Bubba Watson and Harold Varner III
10:15 a.m. Joaquin Niemann and Mito Pereira
Justin Rose and Henrik Stenson
10:26 a.m. James Hahn and Kevin Chappell
Kyle Stanley and Camilo Villegas
10:37 a.m. Doug Ghim and Matthias Schwab
Harry Higgs and Austin Smotherman
10:48 a.m. Lee Hodges and Vince Whaley
Alex Smalley and Hayden Buckley
10:59 a.m. Seth Reeves and Jared Wolfe
Curtis Thompson and Nick Hardy
1:35 p.m. Tom Hoge and Paul Barjon
Martin Laird and Robert MacIntyre
1:46 p.m. Bo Van Pelt and Ben Martin
Austin Cook and Jason Dufner
1:57 p.m. Danny Lee and Sangmoon Bae
Seung-Yul Noh and Michael Kim
2:08 p.m. Kevin Kisner and Scott Brown
Keith Mitchell and Brandt Snedeker
2:19 p.m. Lucas Glover and Chez Reavie
Garrick Higgo and Branden Grace
2:30 p.m. Sung Kang and John Huh
Robert Streb and Troy Merritt
2:41 p.m. Tommy Gainey and Robert Garrigus
Scott Piercy and Sean O’Hair
2:52 p.m. Denny McCarthy and Ben Kohles
Hank Lebioda and Chase Seiffert
3:03 p.m. Matthew NeSmith and Taylor Moore
Adam Hadwin and Adam Svensson
3:14 p.m. Dawie van der Walt and Brett Drewitt
Michael Gligic and Ryan Armour

TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTVESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Friday, April 22nd

TV

Golf Channel: 3:30-6:30 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6:30 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 9:15 a.m.-6:30 p.m.

Saturday, April 23rd

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 8:45 a.m.-6 p.m.

Sunday, April 24th

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 10:30 a.m.-6 p.m.

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Food poisoning, a car accident, an ace that doesn’t count and a record-tying feat mark early action in Zurich Classic of New Orleans

“No more Cajun for the next couple days, but some soup sounds pretty good at the moment.”

Taylor Moore began his week by getting food poisoning and ended his first round with an eagle as he and Matthew NeSmith tied the tournament course record to take the lead.

David Lipsky started his week at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans with a car accident and ended Thursday on the first page of the leaderboard.

Jay Haas, two years shy of his 70th birthday, showed he still has game to hang with the youngsters on the PGA Tour.

Robert MacIntyre made a hole-in-one but it doesn’t count in the record books.

Collin Morikawa holed out twice in a five-hole span.

And all of this came before the afternoon wave started to tee off in the first round at TPC Louisiana in Avondale, Louisiana, the PGA Tour’s only official team event.

Zurich Classic of New OrleansPGA Tour Live streaming on ESPN+Leaderboard

Welcome to the Big Easy adventures.

“I was in the ER yesterday morning,” Moore said after he and NeSmith shot a 12-under 60 in Four ball to grab the lead. “I had food poisoning Tuesday night up until midday yesterday. So just got an IV and some nausea medicine. Finally ate something this morning, which was nice.

“Got into a little rhythm there at the end, which was cool. But no more Cajun for the next couple days, but some soup sounds pretty good at the moment.”

Added NeSmith: “Honestly, we were just trying to finish 18 holes upright. And all of a sudden, we started catching a touch of a rhythm, started making a few putts, started finding the round a little bit. We finished 18 holes, and that was the goal.”

The format switches to the more difficult Foursomes (alternate shot) for the second round; Four ball will be used in the third round, Foursomes in the final round.

Moore and NeSmith were one shot ahead of the teams of Aaron Rai/Lipsky, Tommy Gainey/Robert Garrigus, and Doc Redman/Sam Ryder.

It was a much better spot to be in for Lipsky, who on Tuesday was rear-ended on his way to the golf course as he pulled out from an inside lane to avoid a car that had broken down.

“I’m fine,” Lipsky said. “I started changing lanes, and the guy behind me, I guess, wasn’t paying attention and slammed on the brakes and smoked me. I’m all right. I think the other two drivers were fine.

“It was a little bit of a hectic beginning to the week.”

Jay Haas plays from the 13th tee during the first round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Andrew Wevers-USA TODAY Sports

Haas, 68, began his 799th week at a PGA Tour event by teaming with his son, Bill, 39, to shoot 65. The winner of nine PGA Tour titles and 18 PGA Tour Champions events hadn’t played in a PGA Tour event since 2010, hadn’t made a PGA Tour cut since 2006, and hadn’t won on the PGA Tour since the 1993 Texas Open.

But the elder Haas made four birdies to his son’s three.

“We hammed-and-egged it. We bounced back and forth,” the older Haas said. “I had a ball today. I played well. I thought I was helpful and all that, so it was nice. Hopefully I can continue that the rest of the week and we’ll see what we can do.

“It was fun today.”

Lefty MacIntyre didn’t look too excited about his tee shot on the par-3, 207-yard 14th but the ball took a nice bounce from just in front of the green and rolled right into the cup for his first ace in a PGA Tour-sanctioned event. MacIntyre, who used a 6-iron, is denied a place in the record books because statistics in team events are not included.

As for Morikawa, he holed out from 94 yards on the par-4 14th and chipped in from 40 feet on the par-3 17th as he and Viktor Hovland, the first team in tournament history to feature two top-5 players in the official world rankings, were leading the tournament in the early going.

But the two were even-par on their final eight holes and shot 65.

“Even with a kind of mediocre day,” Morikawa said, “to still be at 7 under, we’re still right there with formats to come.”

And likely some more zany incidents.

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Despite a car accident earlier in the week, David Lipsky feeling ‘all right’ atop the leaderboard at Zurich Classic

“Yeah, it was a little bit of a hectic beginning to the week.”

AVONDALE, La. — David Lipsky was on his way to TPC Louisiana on Tuesday morning when he was passing a scene of a broken down car. When he went to change lanes to get out of the way, he was then hit from behind, causing damage to the left rear of his rental car.

“I was driving here on Tuesday morning, and there was a car right in front of me that had broke down,” Lipsky said in his post-round press conference Thursday, “so I started changing lanes, and the guy behind me, I guess, wasn’t paying attention and slammed on the brakes and smoked me.”

“I’m all right. I think the other two drivers were fine. Yeah, it was a little bit of a hectic beginning to the week,” he said.

Lipsky must be feeling all right, because he and his partner, Aaron Rai, opened the Zurich Classic of New Orleans with a best ball 11-under 61 to take an early two-shot lead in the Thursday morning wave.

Zurich Classic of New OrleansPGA Tour Live streaming on ESPN+ | Thursday tee times, format | Leaderboard

“We did complement each other really well today. David played some incredible golf, hit some shots really close, putted well,” Rai said after their round. “And David made a lot of birdies, especially early on and around the turn, which really got things going for us. I chipped in a couple things on the back nine, but it was great to see David be a part of it.”

Lipsky made six birdies and an eagle, which came in the form of a 113-yard hole out on the par-4 8th.

Tomorrow the pair will be playing an alternate shot format, a type of golf neither one has an extensive history with.

“I’ve never played foursomes before,” Rai said.

“I played like two holes alternate shot like five years ago. That was the closest I’ve had to this type of format,” Lipsky said.

They’ll have to acclimate quickly if they plan to hold off the star-studded teams just a few shots back.

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Robert MacIntyre looked disgusted with his tee shot on the par-3 14th at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, then it went in for an ace

Just once it’d be nice if this happened to me.

AVONDALE, La. — We’ve all been there. You hit a shot, look where it’s going, then hang your head in disgust as it flies miles from your target. But when you get up to the ball, it’s 100 times better than expected.

Well, Robert MacIntyre had this happen to him Thursday at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, but on another level.

On the par-3 14th at TPC Louisiana, the Scottsman hit his tee shot and immediately looked displeased. He hung his head and walked over to his bag. To his credit, the ball did land several yards before the green.

Then it got a hop. Then it kept rolling. Then it found the bottom of the cup.

When the camera panned back to the tee, MacIntyre looked borderline confused.

Then elation set in.

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Buckets: Collin Morikawa holes out twice in five holes at Zurich Classic

Collin Morikawa made a chip-in eagle and a chip-in birdie in a span of five holes.

NEW OREANS — Coming into the week, it was hard to imagine anyone beating the pair of Viktor Hovland and Collin Morikawa. The once — and future — Ryder Cup rivals have teamed up this week for the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

The No. 5 and No. 2 ranked players in the world have taken the early lead in New Orleans thanks to Morikawa holing out for eagle on the par-4 13th from 94 yards, then just four holes later, cashing in a birdie chip on the par-3 17th.

During their Wednesday news conference prior to the start of the tournament, Hovland said he played hard to get when Morikawa asked to partner up.

“When he first asked me in Bahamas, I was really excited,” Hovland said. “You kind of have to play hard to get a little bit and had to make him kind of work for it a bit.”

Zurich Classic of New OrleansPGA Tour Live streaming on ESPN+ | Thursday tee times, format | Leaderboard

After seeing how the Cal product is playing through nine holes, he may not take so long to answer next season.

Eagle hole-out

Buckets.

Birdie chip-in

Through nine holes, Hovland/Morikawa sit at 6 under, two shots in the lead.

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